Early-diverging bumblebees from across the roof of the world: the high-mountain subgenus Mendacibombus revised from species’ gene coalescents and morphology (Hymenoptera, Apidae)
Author
Williams, Paul H.
Author
Huang, Jiaxing
Author
Rasmont, Pierre
Author
An, Jiandong
text
Zootaxa
2016
4204
1
1
72
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4204.1.1
3f8866d2-529e-43ad-b971-29fc52a13858
1175-5326
192302
C050058A-774D-49C0-93F9-7A055B51C2A0
8.
Bombus turkestanicus
Skorikov
(
Figs 17, 23
,
31
,
45, 52
,
63
)
[
Bombus mendax
Gerstaecker
;
Morawitz 1875
:4
, misidentification.]
<
Bombus mendax
> subsp.
turkestanicus
Skorikov 1910b
:329
, type-locality citation (Cyrillic) ‘[Turkestan (Samarkand, Fergana, and
Semirechensk Province
)]’.
Lectotype
queen by present designation
ZISP
examined, (Cyrillic) ‘[Voru, Samarkand]’ (Alai,
Tajikistan
). Note 1.
Mendacibombus mendax
subsp.
turkestanicus
(
Skorikov); Skorikov 1914
:124
.
Mendacibombus turkestanicus
(
Skorikov); Skorikov 1923
:149
;
Skorikov, 1931
:215
.
Bombus turkestanicus
Skorikov
;
Reinig 1934
:172
.
Bombus (Mendacibombus) turkestanus
Skorikov
;
Panfilov 1957
:237
;
Panfilov 1962
:195
;
P.H. Williams 1991
:15
, 41; S.-
F. Wang & Yao 1996
:303
;
P.H. Williams 1998
:99
; P.H. Williams 2011:28.
Note
1 (
turkestanicus
).
Skorikov’s
original description of the taxon
turkestanicus
cites the
type
locality as
Samarkand
,
Fergana
, and
Semirechensk Province
. The
ZISP
collection studied by
Skorikov
contains a queen that agrees with the original description and carries the labels: (1) white, printed (
Cryrillic
) ‘[
Voru
, /
Samarkands. obl.
/
Golbek
]
20 VI 09
’; (2) white, printed (
Cyrillic
) ‘[
k.
Skorikova
]’; (3) red, handwritten ‘
Paralectotypus
Bomb.
/
mendax subsp.
/
turkestanicus Skor.
/ design.
Podbolotsk
.
’ (
M. Podbolotskaya
, unpublished); (4) green, printed ‘
Mendacibombus
/ MD# 3525 det. PHW’; (5) red, printed ‘
LECTOTYPE
[female] /
Bombus mendax
ssp. /
turkestanicus
/
Skorikov
, 1910 / det.
PH Williams
2012’; (6) white, printed ‘[female]
Bombus
/ (
Mendacibombus
) /
turkestanicus
/ det
.
PH
Williams 2012’.
This
specimen, which is complete, is regarded as one of
Skorikov’s
syntypes
and is designated here as the
lectotype
in order to reduce uncertainty in the identity and application of the name.
A second queen collected at Voru by Golbek in 1909 (MD#320, NHM, sent by Skorikov as part of an exchange with the NHM in 1934), closely similar in morphology, is designated here as a paralectotype and interpreted as conspecific.
Etymology.
The species is named after Russian Turkestan, which from
1867‒1918
was a Governorate-General (Krai) of the
Russian Empire
in Central Asia.
Taxonomy and variation.
The interpretation of this species is based here on DNA, as well as on the form of the female labrum and of the male genitalia.
Skorikov (1910b)
described females of the taxon
turkestanicus
s. str.
from the Alai mountains (MD#3525) as having the corbicula framed with partly light rusty and partly greyish hairs, with the pale bands light yellow, and with the entire side of the thorax and the ventral side of the metasoma (S1‒4) light yellow. For the COI group of specimens with this
B. turkestanicus
colour pattern (
Fig. 13
), the form of the female labrum is diagnostic (
Fig. 17
).
Most specimens of this species are yellow-banded. For two queens from near the Kyrgyz Ata (river),
Kyrgyzstan
, one has a light-yellow-banded colour pattern (MD#325) and the other a cream-white-banded colour pattern (MD#324). A queen from
Kyrgyzstan
is white-banded and groups with
B. turkestanicus
by its COI sequence (
Fig. 14
: the white-banded individual labeled ‘white’ MD#1281 and the yellow-banded taxon
turkestanicus
s. str
. MD#324). This material is interpreted as conspecific, as parts of the species
B. turkestanicus
s. l
..
Diagnostic description.
Wings nearly clear.
Female hair colour pattern:
generally black, but with pale hair (yellow or cream-white) over most of the face (with variable amounts of black intermixed on the outer side of the face and above the antenna), in a usually small patch on the vertex of the head, in a transverse band anteriorly on the thoracic dorsum (occasionally with black hairs intermixed posteriorly) and extending laterally and ventrally all the way to the midleg base (
cf.
B. makarjini
), in a transverse band posteriorly on the thoracic dorsum (scutellum; so the thoracic dorsum between the wing bases has the hair entirely black in a narrow band), on T1‒2, although T2 with a few black hairs intermixed along the posterior margin, orange hair on T3 as a posterior fringe, and throughout on T4‒6, T6 without obvious black hairs, S1‒6 entirely pale (
cf.
B. makarjini
). Hindleg tibia with the corbicular fringes usually nearly entirely yellow or grey, the long hairs in the fringes sometimes orange close to the base and with a few short orange-brown bristles along their inner edges, only rarely with a few long dark hairs intermixed (
Fig. 23
) (
cf.
B. makarjini
,
B. margreiteri
,
B. defector
).
Female morphology:
labrum with the basal depression narrow, the transverse ridge just broader medially than the basal depression, in the median third subsiding slightly but not clearly or abruptly interrupted, with many scattered punctures, the lateral tubercles with only a few punctures (
Fig. 17
) (
cf.
B. margreiteri
,
B. defector
). Clypeus in its central half with many widely spaced small and large punctures (
cf.
B. margreiteri
,
B. defector
).
Male morphology
: genitalia (
Fig. 31
) with the volsella distally rounded (finger-shaped) and curled back dorsally but not anteriorly; volsella at its broadest near the midpoint of its length, the dorsal surface just distal to this point without a raised curved ridge just inside the inner margin; volsella with the apex narrowed, narrower than the adjacent penis-valve head. Penis-valve inner shoulder located at Ĺ 0.5× the length of the penis valve from the distal end to the broadest point of the spatha; penis valve proximal to the outer shoulder <2× as broad as the penis-valve head; penis-valve breadth just proximal to the penis-valve head 0.11× the length of the penis valve distal to the broadest point of the spatha.
Material examined.
21 queens
87 workers
27 males
, from
Afghanistan
,
China
,
Kazakhstan
,
Kyrgyzstan
, and
Tajikistan
(
Fig. 63
:
AMNH
,
IAR
,
IZB
,
KUK
,
NHM
,
NME
,
OLL
, PW,
RMNH
,
SMNS
,
UMONS
,
ZISP
), with
26 specimens
sequenced (interpretable sequences listed in
Figs. 11–13
).
Habitat and distribution.
Flower-rich alpine and subalpine grassland, at elevations 950‒(2146)‒
4350 m
a.s.l.. A species of the Tian Shan, Alai, Pamir, and Hindu Kush mountains. Compared to
B. defector
, the distribution of
B. turkestanicus
extends less far to the east, overlaps broadly in the mid part of the range (and the two species often occur together), but extends further to the south in the Pamir and Hindu Kush, where it reaches higher elevations.
Bombus turkestanicus
overlaps with
B. margreiteri
in the Tian Shan, although the two seldom occur together. There is some overlap of
B. turkestanicus
with
B. marussinus
in the Pamir and Hindu Kush, although the two seldom occur together.
Food plants.
Williams (2011).
Behaviour.
No records.